Snip John E. is too young to remember (and so is John M.), but he reminds us of one of the first "factory muscle cars" that is exactly 77 years old. Snip Now that the truth has been stretched a bit to include "early" muscle cars one should not forget-------Chitty Chitty Bang Bang! No not necessarily the one made famous by Dick VanDyke and Disney Studios http://www.4qd.co.uk/evs/pics/Chitty.jpeg But the one manufactured by Louis <http://www.brooklandstrack.co.uk/Drivrlist/zboro1.htm> Vorow Zboroswki if you were to apply a bit of liberty to the definition of the word manufactured. There were three of these cars manufactured with a forth that was related and subscribed to the formula of having a large engine and a light weight body installed for the sole purpose of enhanced speed being available. http://j-a-n-e.org/events/tours/bahre_collection_jul05/cars/target15.htm l One may not be able to tell that the displacement of this legendary monster was in the area of 1098 cubic inches from the picture or that this was smaller than the first Chitty that displaced 1403 cubic inches. http://www.answers.com/topic/chitty-bang-bang However it was equipped with state of the art mechanical components that consisted of a Mercedes Chassis circa 1920ish complete with chain drive and (would you believe) mechanical drum brakes. History does not seem to enlighten one on whether the drums were finned or not. But there is a comment noted somewhere about the efficiency of these things. http://www.supercars.net/cars/2122.html I once met a fellow who raced regularly and actively in vintage sports car racing. http://www.vararacing.com/ Who campaigned as I remember (beware of senior moments) something like a 1920 Essex sprint car that apparently had been built by some one that was either an old friend of the family or part of the family and then raced regularly. This car then disappeared from site and after a dedicated hunt was located in Canada, purchased and rebuilt to race on regular occasions. It had a rudimentary but legal roll bar that was required which was about the only modification made to the car other than restoring it for cosmetics. This was a 1920 vintage dirt track oval racer folks, not a paddle shift Grand Prix mega buck wonder. It raced in high gear only and could hit the magic C note on the straight-aways. Of course the original Hudson (obligatory AMC information) Essex pistons were not up to that type of a job but the owner found that he could fit Harley Davidson pistons in the thing and they would last. Now at the end of the straights when the car needed to get whoaed down he had the latest 1920 vintage stoppers installed on the rear axle. External contracting drum brakes. http://clubs.hemmings.com/clubsites/wokr/gallery/wil_134.htm Whooeee! How about the fronts you say? These worked so well they were not needed on the front maybe, or maybe it was the use of front brakes was not really in general use at this time and the backs were all that most every one had. One wonders if these would be a viable alternative to disc brakes. But what ever the reason was, they did not need to have holes drilled in the drums to have the water let out. ;-) John -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list/attachments/20070222/e8e98109/attachment.htm _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list